Join our Editorial Board for BMC Psychology
Published in Social Sciences and Behavioural Sciences & Psychology
BMC Psychology is a peer-reviewed, open access journal that welcomes articles on a broad range of topics related to psychology, human behavior, and the mind. We encourage submissions using a variety of research methods, including both quantitative and qualitative approaches, as well as basic and translational research, and welcome submissions on a wide range of interdisciplinary topics.
Why become an Editorial Board Member?
As a Board Member your profile in the field will be raised through your work on the journal and interactions with authors, reviewers and fellow board members.
- You will receive access to a dedicated editorial site, where you can find all the information needed to help you in your role, as well as learn about the workings of the journal and keep up to date with new developments as they happen.
- You will have the opportunity to join Editorial Board meetings, webinars, meet fellow Editors and increase your network.
- You will also received a 20% discount on our Article Processing Charges for your submissions to the BMC Series journals.
More information can be found here: Join our Editorial Board for BMC Psychology
Details on how to apply
If you are interested in becoming an Editorial Board Member for BMC Psychology, please click here to submit your application. We consider applications on a rolling basis.
Thank you for considering this opportunity to contribute to BMC Psychology.
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BMC Psychology
BMC Psychology is a peer-reviewed, open access journal that welcomes articles on a broad range of topics related to psychology, human behavior, and the mind.
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Athlete mental health in organizational culture and sport systems: eastern perspectives and global lessons
BMC Psychology is calling for submissions to our Collection on the social, cultural, and systemic influences shaping wellbeing in sport environments across diverse global contexts. Athlete mental health has emerged as a critical area of research and practice, yet much of the existing literature has been grounded in Western, individual-centered frameworks that emphasize internal experiences and one-to-one interventions. Increasingly, there is recognition that wellbeing in sport is deeply embedded within relationships, organizational cultures, and broader social systems, particularly in contexts shaped by collectivist values, shared identity, and moral responsibility.
This Collection seeks to foreground Eastern and collectivist perspectives while fostering dialogue across global knowledge traditions. Rather than positioning any single framework as universal, we aim to explore how athlete mental health is constructed, experienced, and supported across different cultural, organizational, and institutional settings. Particular attention is given to how sport systems, coaching environments, and social relationships influence wellbeing, distress, help-seeking, and recovery. We also encourage work that reflects a strong scientist–practitioner orientation, bridging research, applied practice, and policy, and emphasizing collaboration among scholars, practitioners, athletes, coaches, and organizations.
A defining feature of this Collection is its recognition of diversity within Eastern cultural contexts. We encourage contributions that move beyond treating Eastern perspectives as a single category and instead examine how different traditions, values, and social expectations shape athlete experiences in distinct ways. Variations in moral frameworks, relational obligations, discipline norms, and culturally specific meanings of endurance, sacrifice, and achievement may influence how athletes understand distress, cope with challenges, and navigate recovery. By exploring both cross-cultural and intra-cultural differences, this Collection aims to deepen and nuance current global conversations.
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
- Athlete mental health in collectivist, relational, family-centered, or community-based sport cultures
- Organizational culture and mental health in elite sport systems
- Coaching climates, leadership, team structures, and institutional influences on wellbeing
- Athlete career development, transitions, dual careers, retirement, deselection, and post-sport adjustment
- Cultural identity, belonging, stigma, and help-seeking in sport
- Eastern philosophical perspectives relevant to mental health, wellbeing, and human flourishing in sport
- Comparative analyses of different Eastern cultural contexts and their implications for athlete mental health
- Intra-Eastern cultural differences in values such as discipline, shame, relational obligation, achievement pressure, and social comparison in sport
- Indigenized, culturally responsive, or decolonizing approaches to athlete mental health
We invite contributions that expand conceptual, methodological, and applied perspectives in this field. By bringing together diverse voices and approaches, this Collection seeks to challenge assumptions, broaden understanding, and support more inclusive and context-sensitive models of care for athletes worldwide.
All manuscripts submitted to this journal, including those submitted to collections and special issues, are assessed in line with our editorial policies and the journal’s peer-review process. Reviewers and editors are required to declare competing interests and can be excluded from the peer review process if a competing interest exists.
This Collection supports and amplifies research related to SDG 3: Good Health and Well-being and SDG 10: Reduced Inequalities.
Publishing Model: Open Access
Deadline: Jan 08, 2027
Early maladaptive schemas: theory, research, and practice
BMC Psychology is calling for submissions to our Early maladaptive schemas: theory, research, and practice Collection. Deeply rooted cognitive and emotional patterns, often formed in childhood and adolescence, can persist into adulthood and influence vulnerability to a wide range of mental health difficulties. This Collection aims to bring together contemporary theory, empirical research, and applied perspectives to advance understanding of early maladaptive schemas and their relevance for assessment and intervention.
Early maladaptive schemas are associated with persistent symptoms such as chronic low mood, anxiety, emotional dysregulation, interpersonal sensitivity, and maladaptive coping behaviors. They have been extensively linked to diagnoses including major depressive disorder, generalized anxiety disorder, post-traumatic stress disorder, eating disorders, and personality disorders. Schema-focused interventions, including schema therapy and integrative cognitive-behavioral approaches, have demonstrated effectiveness in addressing long-standing patterns that are often resistant to standard treatments. By examining mechanisms of change, developmental pathways, and contextual influences, this Collection seeks to clarify how schemas contribute to both the onset and maintenance of mental disorders.
Potential subtopics of interest include but are not limited to:
- Theoretical developments and refinements in schema models across the lifespan
- Empirical studies examining the relationship between early maladaptive schemas and psychiatric symptoms
- Assessment tools and measurement advances for identifying schema domains and coping styles
- Schema-focused treatments and outcomes across clinical populations
- The role of trauma, attachment disruptions, and adverse childhood experiences in schema development
- Cultural, social, and contextual factors influencing schema expression and severity
- Longitudinal and developmental studies tracking schema stability and change over time
By bringing together diverse perspectives, this Collection aims to form a deeper understanding of enduring cognitive-emotional patterns and their implications for mental health and well-being.
All manuscripts submitted to this journal, including those submitted to collections and special issues, are assessed in line with our editorial policies and the journal’s peer-review process. Reviewers and editors are required to declare competing interests and can be excluded from the peer review process if a competing interest exists.
This Collection supports and amplifies research related to SDG 3: Good Health and Well-being.
Publishing Model: Open Access
Deadline: Jan 14, 2027
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Dear Dr. Yang, sorry to cotact you here. Last week I sent an email to inquire the submission status of a paper (titled “Measuring individual autonomy with respect to playing video games”, submission ID: 743beb6f-0acc-42ba-9edd-c2c8fd5b4053) to bmcpsychology@biomedcentral.com, but got no reply. I would greatly appreciate your attention to this matter. Thanks a lot.